Senate blue ribbon chairman Teofisto Guingona III said the perception that Filipino banks have been accommodating deposits from illegal transactions “affect investors’ perception on whether or not we have a safe banking system.
“A weak anti-money laundering legal framework discourages legitimate banking activities and invites instead criminals who seek to make the Philippines a safe haven for their unlawfully acquired money,” he said.
The IMF, in its December 2012 report, said money laundering, terrorist financing and the related predicate crimes could undermine the stability of a country’s financial system. Illegal money would most likely remain unaccounted for and affect government data, it said.
Due to its failure to update the Amla, the Philippines is under pressure from the Finance Action Task Force (FATF), a global agency that monitors money laundering and terrorist-financing activities.
The FATF wants the country to amend the anti-money-laundering law so transactions including the purchase of big-ticket jewellery, real estate and other purchases that can be used to disguise illegally acquired currency would be included in the list of monitored activities.
The second set of Amla amendments proposes to expand the list of “unlawful activities” to include terrorism, conspiracy to commit terrorism, bribery, fraud and illegal exaction.
It also extends the definition of money laundering as a crime so it outlaws the proceeds of illegal activities that are transacted, converted, transferred, disposed of, moved, acquired, possessed, used, concealed or disguised.
Failure by Congress to approve the second set of Amla amendments by the first quarter of the year would find the Philippines joining the FATF’s blacklist and make it more difficult to engage in international monetary transactions such as remittances from overseas Filipino workers.
Guingona said the Senate would discuss the Amla amendments after the resumption of Congress on January 21.
The Amla amendments are similar to those that Thailand was required to endorse late last year.